Make fresh Indian food in 5 minutes.

The Buttermilk Company helps you make authentic, fresh Indian meals in 5 minutes by just adding hot water! Our products are vegan, preservative free, and non-GMO.

We've changed a lot in the last 4 months! Most exciting: four new dishes, new packaging to include nutrition facts + spice levels, double the portions in each packet, and subscriptions!

TechCrunch

When Mitra Raman went off to college, all she wanted was a bowl of her mother's homemade rasam. The daughter of Indian immigrants, Raman grew up eating traditional South Indian cuisine almost every day, but didn't quite know how to make it just like mom when she left home.

GeekWire

The unique workplace culture at Amazon provided Mitra Raman both the motivation to quit the technology giant and the engineering chops to launch her own endeavor. Raman landed her first job at Amazon as a software development intern while still working on her computer science undergrad degree from...

Northwest Asian Weekly

By Lyndsey Brollini NORTHWEST ASIAN WEEKLY Mitra Raman grew up drinking buttermilk, or chaas, all the time as a child, which she described as being similar to liquefied yogurt. "First thing I ate was buttermilk rice," Raman said. She now associates the drink with her favorite comfort foods.

Emma's Edition

It's no secret that I'm a girl on the go. I'm balancing grad school, working full time, and blogging. I'm trying to get settled in a new apartment, planning my dog's birthday party, and still running twice a week. My busy schedule doesn't allow much room for cooking so I'm always looking for fast, healthy food options.

Table Manners Aside: A Seattle Food Blog

TMA'ed while jamming to Havana by Camila Cabello Temi: Maybe you've heard about them on social media, maybe you haven't, but The Buttermilk Company is a new company (still in beta) that is all about bringing real Indian food into your home real fast.

Seattle Magazine

Mitra Raman gathered family recipes from the Indian communities in Seattle and beyond to create authentic Indian dishes that she offers through her startup, The Buttermilk Company. The daughter of Indian immigrants, Raman-who started Buttermilk last summer-knows what it's like to miss the foods you grew up with.

Takeaways re-invented. Homecooked meals on demand.

Yummit is a marketplace for home-cooked meals on demand. Re-inventing takeaways for the better, offering authentic, fresh meals made at home, in real kitchens across globe. Delivered to you directly, or ready for pickup.

Medium

The world is full of talented and passionate cooks - we all know at least one friend or family member who should probably have their own restaurant. The problem is not everyone has the time or the resources to pursue a career as a cook, and opening your own restaurant can be a huge financial gamble, leaving a lot of great cooks working elsewhere, and away fr…See more

Save money on your favorite meals with smart menu prices

Save up on restaurant delivery & takeout with smart menu prices and help prevent food waste! Gebni is a new kind of food app offering food delivery & takeout at better prices using a unique smart-pricing technology that constantly updates meal prices to reflect current demand levels for your favorite meals!

Play Store

Free

Forbes

Gebni is a new restaurant food delivery app that applies dynamic pricing to determine discounts. Two entrepreneurial brothers based in New York City, Mohamed and Sidi Ahmed Merzouk, originally from Algeria, co-founded Gebni, which officially launched in February 2017. For many harried city dwellers across the U.S., restaurant delivery is a necessary service.

WSJ

Gebni is one of several local startups trying to solve a continuing logistical dilemma: There is likely enough prepared food to affordably feed everyone in New York, but a lot winds up in the dumpster.

India's largest food delivery app

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. When it comes to ordering food online in India, you are either a Swiggy person or a Zomato lover. The food-tech segment in the fastest growing nationhas seen early entrants like Zomato and Swiggy fight for the top spot and gain maximum customers.

TechCrunch

The Indian food delivery startup Swiggy has raised $100 million in its latest round of funding. Led by the global investment and media conglomerate, Naspers, with participation from the Chinese e-commerce company Meituan-Dianping, the investment is an indicator that the Indian technology market is hitting its stride.